A Star Wars character is gobbling up social media interactions on Facebook and Twitter as the Democratic presidential candidates struggle to gain attention on social media, Axios reported Friday.

Baby Yoda, a character from the Star Wars series “The Mandalorian,” is pulling in twice the amount of interactions as former Vice President Joe Biden and Sen. Bernie Sanders, the report notes, citing data from NewsWhip. Every other presidential candidate is slipping further back.

NewsWhip’s data was collected between Nov. 12 and 25.

Former New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg, for instance, entered the presidential race on Nov. 24 and received a deluge of articles written about his entrance. Unfortunately for the billionaire businessman, none of those media pieces gained much traction online.

Bloomberg, who had roughly 7,600 stories written about his candidacy, ranks 14th in terms of average interactions per story about him, while Baby Yoda has notched an average interaction rate 10 times higher than his. The Mandalorian premiered Nov. 12 on Disney+.

Baby Yoda has had only 1,250 articles written about it, according to NewsWhip, a website that collects data on media interactions.

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NewsWhip’s data collection does not take into account the sheer number of Baby Yoda memes, GIFs, and viral content floating around on Facebook and Twitter. Such content has probably driven the character much further than Bloomberg and other POTUS candidates who are fighting for viral content.

President Donald Trump, meanwhile, has enjoyed tremendous earned media over the past year.

The president’s campaign began selling straws in July as an act of rebellion against cities that began prohibiting the items, and the campaign began selling markers after CNN criticized him for supposedly using a pen on a map to alter Hurricane Dorian’s trajectory. These techniques were being used as Republicans continued to slam Facebook for discriminating against conservatives.

The president and Republican lawmakers are fleshing out ways to reign in Facebook, Google and Twitter before they become too big to regulate. Trump, for his part, invited a slew of conservative activists to the White House in July to discuss how social media companies are affecting their livelihoods. The summit did not result in any committed action, but it did elevate the concern.

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